Case No: A1/2003/1092
Neutral Citation Number: [2004] EWCA Civ 144
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF JUDICATURE
COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE EMPLOYMENT
APPEAL TRIBUNAL
Royal Courts of Justice
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL
Date: 17 February 2004
Before :
LORD JUSTICE BROOKE
Vice President of the Court of Appeal (Civil Division)
LORD JUSTICE SEDLEY
and
LORD JUSTICE LATHAM
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Between :
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SIDNEY COLLINS |
Appellant
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ROYAL NATIONAL THEATRE BOARD LIMITED |
Respondent
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Robin Allen QC and Catherine Rayner (instructed
by Thompsons) for the Appellant
Richard Lissack QC and Andrew Short (instructed
by Ann Cutting [Employment]) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 8 December 2003
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JUDGMENT : APPROVED BY THE COURT FOR HANDING DOWN (SUBJECT TO EDITORIAL
CORRECTIONS)
Lord Justice Sedley :
The issue
- This appeal raises a new and sharp question of discrimination law: can
an employer's failure to make adjustments to accommodate a disabled employee
be unreasonable but justified?
The law
- In the Disability Discrimination Act 1995 (the DDA), s.4 makes it unlawful
for an employer to discriminate against a disabled person by, among other
things, dismissing him. S.5 then defines discrimination:
- For the purposes of this Part, an employer discriminates against a disabled
person if -
- for a reason which relates to the disabled person's disability, he treats
him less favourably than he treats or would treat others to whom that reason
does not or would not apply; and
- he cannot show that the treatment in question is justified.
- For the purposes of this Part, an employer also discriminates against
a disabled person if -
- he fails to comply with a section 6 duty imposed on him in relation to
the disabled person; and
- he cannot show that his failure to comply with that duty is justified.
- Subject to subsection (5), for the purposes of subsection (1) treatment
is justified if, but only if, the reason for it is both material to the
circumstances of the particular case and substantial.
- For the purposes of subsection (2), failure to comply with a section
6 duty is justified if, but only if, the reason for the failure is both
material to the circumstances of the particular case and substantial.
- If, in a case falling within subsection (1), the employer is under a
section 6 duty in relation to the disabled person but fails without justification
to comply with that duty, his treatment of that person cannot be justified
under subsection (3) unless it would have been justified even if he had
complied with the section 6 duty
- The employer's s.6 duty is the following:
- Where -
- any arrangements made by or on behalf of an employer or
- any physical feature of the premises occupied by the employer
place the disabled person concerned at a disadvantage in comparison
to persons who are not disabled, it is the duty of the employer to take such
steps as it is reasonable, in all the circumstances of the case, for him to
have to take in order to prevent the arrangements or feature having that effect.
- Subsection (1)(a) applies only in relation to –
- arrangements for determining to whom employment should be offered;
- any term, condition or arrangements on which employment, promotion, a
transfer, training or any other benefit is offered or afforded.
- The following are examples of steps which an employer may have to take
in relation to a disabled person in order to comply with subsection (1)
–
- making adjustments to premises;
- allocating some of the disabled person’s duties to another person;
- transferring him to fill an existing vacancy;
- altering his working hours;
- assigning him to a different place of work;
- allowing him to be absent during working hours for rehabilitation,
assessment or treatment;
- giving him, or arranging for him to be given, training;
- acquiring or modifying equipment;
- modifying instructions or reference manuals;
- modifying procedures for testing or assessment;
- providing a reader or interpreter;
- providing supervision.
- In determining whether it is reasonable for an employer to have to take
a particular step in order to comply with subsection (1), regard shall
be had, in particular, to –
(a) the extent to which taking the step would prevent
the effect in question;
(b) the extent to which it is practicable for the employer
to take the step;
(c) the financial and other costs which would be incurred
by the employer in taking the step and the extent to which taking it would
disrupt any of his activities;
(d) the extent of the employer’s financial and other resources;
(e) the availability to the employer of financial or other
assistance with respect to taking the step.
This subsection is subject to any provision of regulations
made under subsection (8).
- In this section, "the disabled person concerned" means
–
- in the case of arrangements for determining to whom employment should
be offered, any disabled person who is, or has notified the employer that
he may be, an applicant for that employment;
- in any other case, a disabled person who is –
- an applicant for the employment concerned; or
- an employee of the employer concerned.
- Nothing in this section imposes any duty on an employer in relation to
a disabled person if the employer does not know, and could not reasonably
be expected to know –
- in the case of an applicant or potential applicant, that the disabled
person concerned is, or may be, an applicant for the employment; or
- in any case, that that person has a disability and is likely to be affected
in the way mentioned in subsection (1).
(7) Subject to the provisions of this section, nothing in
this Part is to be taken to require an employer to treat a disabled person
more favourably that he treats or would treat others.
(8) Regulations may make provision, for the purposes of subsection
(1) –
- as to circumstances in which arrangements are, or a physical feature
is, to be taken to have the effect mentioned in that subsection;
- as to circumstances in which arrangements are not, or a physical feature
is not, to be taken to have that effect;
- as to circumstances in which it is reasonable for an employer to have
to take steps of a prescribed description;
- as to steps which it is always reasonable for an employer to have to
take;
- as to circumstances in which it is not reasonable for an employer to
have to take steps of a prescribed description;
- as to steps which is never reasonable for an employer to have to take;
- as to things which are to be treated as physical features;
- as to things which are not to be treated as such features.
(9) Regulations made under subsection (8)(c), (d), (e) or
(f) may, in particular, make provision by reference to the cost of taking the
steps concerned.
(10) Regulations may make provision adding to the duty imposed
on employers by this section, including provision of a kind which may be made
under subsection (8).
- The DDA by
s. 53A(1) (introduced by the Disability Rights Commission Act 1999) provides
for
the Disability Rights Commission to "prepare and issue
codes of practice giving practical guidance on how to avoid discrimination".
As further amended, subsection (8) makes it clear that breach of the code
by itself confers no rights, but subsection (8A) provides that a tribunal
must take into account any provision of the code which appears to it to be
relevant.
- An unfair dismissal, under s.98 of the Employment Rights Act 1996, occurs
either when none of the potentially fair reasons for the dismissal (which
include incapacity) is shown or when the employer has not acted reasonably
in treating the reason he has established as a sufficient reason for dismissal.
Changes to the legislation
- The justification defence afforded by s.5(4) has been removed from the
DDA with effect from 1 October 2004 by the Disability Discrimination Act
1995 (Amendment) Regulations 2003 (S.I. 1673). The justification defence
afforded by s.5(3) will, however, remain. The present case is therefore one
of a substantial but now diminishing residue.
- It is relevant to see the form which the new provision is to take. In place
of s.5, s.4 is to be preceded by a new section 3A:
- For the purposes of this Part, a person discriminates against a disabled
person if –
- for a reason which relates to the disabled person’s disability, he
treats him less favourably than he treats or would treat others to whom
that reason does not or would not apply, and
- he cannot show that the treatment in question is justified.
- For the purposes of this Part, a person also discriminates against a
disabled person if he fails to comply with a duty to make reasonable adjustments
imposed on him in relation to the disabled person
.
- Treatment is justified for the purposes of subsection (1)(b) if, but
only if, the reason for it is both material to the circumstances of the
particular case and substantial.
- But treatment of a disabled person cannot be justified under subsection
(3) if it amounts to direct discrimination falling within subsection (5).
- A person directly discriminates against a disabled person if, on the
ground of the person’s disability, he treats the disabled person less favourably
than he treats or would treat a person not having that particular disability
whose relevant circumstances, including his abilities, are the same as,
or not materially different from, those of the disabled person.
- If, in a case falling within subsection (1), a person is under a duty
to make reasonable adjustments in relation to a disabled person but fails
to comply with that duty, his treatment of that person cannot be justified
under subsection (3) unless it would have been justified even if he had
complied with that duty.
- The history of this change is material to what we have to decide. As long
ago as 1999 a ministerial task force reported that, while the s.5(3) defence
of justification of less favourable treatment should be retained, subject
to monitoring and possible adjustment by Regulation, the s.5(4) defence of
justification of unreasonable failure to make adjustments seemed - judging
by the examples given in the Code of Practice - to travel over the same issues
as would already have been decided under s.6. They recommended that the justification
defence to a breach of s.6 should be removed and the Code modified so as
to allocate its examples to the s.6 exercise.
- Government's
published response was this: "When legislative time allows,
we will … remove the justification for failure to make a reasonable adjustment
because this defence can be entirely covered by the need for adjustments
only to be reasonable …".
- It is both in fulfilment of this commitment and in order to comply with
the Framework Directive on Discrimination 2000/78/EC that the amending Regulations
cited above have now been introduced.
The facts
- Mr Collins,
who was born in 1938, was for 18 years a semi-skilled carpenter's labourer
in the
National Theatre's carpentry shop. All the other workers
there were time-served skilled tradesmen. On 11 February 2000 he lost about
a third of the distal phalanx of his right ring finger when, instead of using
a push-stick as he knew he should do, he used his hand to flick away an offcut
from a powered bench saw. It was the workshop's first serious accident in
the 12 years the head carpenter had been there. The wound healed but with
painful neuromas which made the hand - Mr Collins' dominant hand - clumsy.
His hand surgeon advised surgery, which offered a better than even chance
of success, but Mr Collins' GP was against it, even though on the suggestion
of the National Theatre he was shown the surgeon's report. Mr Collins therefore
refused surgery, and in the resulting situation the National Theatre terminated
his employment. Before doing so they had set up a series of controlled tasks
to assess his capability with particular regard to safe working. The employment
tribunal found this to have been done fairly and objectively. It resulted
in what were found to be "genuine and appropriate concerns" that Mr Collins
could no longer work efficiently or safely. A meeting with Mr Collins and
his union representative followed under the theatre's long-term sickness
procedure, but in the light of a disability for which Mr Collins would still
not countenance surgery it was concluded that there was simply no job to
which he could return.
The findings
- The employment
tribunal nevertheless concluded that although a permitted reason for the
dismissal
- incapacity - had been established, it had been
both discriminatory and unfair to dismiss Mr Collins. They considered that
the National Theatre's focus had been on what Mr Collins could not do, and
that it "could have done significantly more in the direction of seeing what
adjustments could be made to accommodate" him and enable him to "grow back
into the job" (para. 27). Their finding that, albeit marginally, he was disabled
within the meaning of the DDA has not been challenged; nor has their finding
that the National Theatre was in breach of s.6., sympathetic though one may
be to its position.
- But the National Theatre on appeal successfully challenged the tribunal's
twin conclusions that the dismissal had been discriminatory and unfair. The
EAT, in a careful judgment delivered by Mr Commissioner Howell QC, considered
that the decision in Jones v Post Office [2001] EWCA Civ 558, [2001]
IRLR 384 of this court (Pill, Arden and Kay LJJ), while troubling
in its effect, was indistinguishable in principle. They remitted the
claims for determination accordingly.
The decision in Jones v Post Office
- Jones concerned the dismissal of a Post Office driver who had developed
first diabetes and then heart disease. He claimed disability discrimination
when he was taken off driving duties as all insulin-dependent Post Office
employees were. But he had been subsequently offered limited driving duties,
and the Post Office conceded that the complete bar had been discriminatory.
The tribunal found that the limited offer was also discriminatory; but the
EAT and this court held that they had approached their decision on the erroneous
footing that it was for them to say, having heard medical evidence on both
sides, whether the employer's decision to set the proposed limit on the employee's
driving was justified or not. The decision of this court was (a) that materiality
and substantiality were all that justification required, and (b) that what
was material and what was substantial was for the employer to decide, the
tribunal's only power being to decide whether the decision fell within the
range of reasonable responses to the known facts.
- It is right
to say that the consequent threshold of justification has been consistently
recognised
as a surprisingly low one. The EAT in the present
case described it as "not very demanding". But it is also right to say that
the facts in Jones clearly warranted the outcome, because the employment
tribunal had decided the case on medical evidence obtained after the employer
had made its decision. I will return to the question of how, jurisprudentially,
that outcome was reached.
- The subsections in play in Jones were (1) and (3). Those in play
in this case are (2) and (4). In Jones (para.6) Pill LJ recorded:
"A second form
of discrimination is defined in s.5(2) and s.6. It is common ground that
consideration of
those provisions does not
now arise in this case."
Jones having been decided on this deliberately restricted
footing, Pill LJ in the present case gave permission to appeal so that a
differential construction could be argued.
The problem
- In giving permission Pill LJ remarked that the applicant's difficulties
should not be underestimated. This was plainly right so far as any merely
textual difference is concerned: the reason why there is not a single definition
of justification for both subsection (1) and subsection (3) appears at first
sight to be simply stylistic. The one provision concerns treatment; the other
concerns failure to do something; both require justification, but a unitary
definition would require verbose provision of a kind which modern parliamentary
drafters rightly try to avoid, at least in legislation of this kind. Two
subsections, Richard Lissack QC for the National Theatre submits, simply
make a unitary test more comprehensible.
- But on examination there may well be more than draftsmanship involved.
There is a substantive difference too. Subsections (1) and (3) concern unjustified
treatment of a disabled employee. While by virtue of subsection (5) treatment
for this purpose is to be tested by an element derived from the s.6 duty,
it is there precisely to prevent an employer from taking advantage of his
own unreasonable failure to accommodate a disabled employee.
- Subsections (2) and (4), by contrast, are there to deal specifically with
discrimination which takes the form of an unjustified breach of the s.6 duty.
They start, therefore, from a point at which the employer has been shown
to have failed to take such steps as were reasonable to prevent the disability
resulting in substantial disadvantage.
- The test of
reasonableness under s.6, as is rightly accepted on both sides, must be
objective. One
notes in particular that s.6(1)(c) speaks of "such
steps as it is reasonable … for him to have to take". One approaches
s.5(2) and (4), therefore, on the footing that the tribunal will already
have found the employer's failure to accommodate the employee's disability
to be objectively unreasonable. If, however, justification under subsection
(4) has the same threshold as this court ascribed to subsection (2) in Jones,
it will be a sufficient answer if the employer had a reason for the failure
which he himself considered, without irrationality but erroneously, to be
material and substantial. Hence the question posed in the first paragraph
of this judgment. Put as Catherine Rayner, junior counsel for Mr Collins,
puts it in her excellent skeleton argument, can an employer resurrect as
a justification for his non-compliance a ground for not accommodating his
disabled employee which the tribunal have already rejected as unreasonable?
- Towards the
conclusion of argument Lord Justice Brooke asked Mr Lissack whether his
case was that
the same test of justification applied (a) to discriminatory
treatment, which by s.5(1) is established without any regard to reasonableness,
and (b) to failure to make reasonable adjustments, which by s.6 only arises
when "all the circumstances of the case" - including the employer's own state
of mind - have been explored, evaluated and balanced as the statute and Regulations
require. Mr Lissack's candid assent demonstrated how stark the problem is.
The solution
- There are a number of avenues to a solution. Although some are no longer
open to us at this level and some have not been canvassed before us, it is
worth noting them all, since our decision may not be the end of this particular
road.
- First, materiality and substantiality might be necessary but not sufficient
conditions of justification. Although not argued before us, this is in my
present view an intelligible meaning of the words in subsections (3) and
(4). Pill LJ noted in his judgment in Jones (para. 21) that in H
J Heinz & Co Ltd v Kenrick [2000] IRLR 144 Lindsay J had "flirted
with" this idea before rejecting it, and the rejection now has this court's
imprimatur in Jones. If it were not thus concluded I would want to
think about it again. The phrase "but only if" is the language of necessity,
not of sufficiency. "If", by contrast, is the language of both: it can mean " provided
only that" and it can mean "provided at least that".
- There is a further element which was not examined in Jones.
The clear purpose of s.5(5) is to deny to an employer who has treated a
disabled
employee less favourably than others any defence of justification which depends
directly or indirectly on a breach by the employer of his s.6 duty to make
adjustments. How is this meant by Parliament to operate on s.5(3)? In its
terms it has to do neither with materiality nor with substantiality, though
it could have been so phrased that it did: "…cannot be material under subsection
(3) unless …", for example. This too suggests that justification may be more
than the sum of materiality and substantiality.
- Secondly, both subsections might make the tribunal the arbiter of what
is material and what is substantial. But this court in Jones was unanimous
in rejecting such a construction of s.5(3). Pill LJ (para. 25) concluded:
"Upon a consideration
of the wording of s.5(3) in context, I conclude that the employment tribunal
are confined to considering whether
the reason given for the less favourable treatment can properly be described
as both material to the circumstances of the particular case and substantial."
Arden LJ (para. 35, 41) put it in this way:
"It is clear
from the wording of s.5(3) that the standard by which the employer's reason
is to
be reviewed is an objective one. This
case has raised the novel question of the intensity of that review … If credible
arguments exist to support the employer's decision, the employment tribunal
may not hold that the reason for the discrimination is not 'substantial'."
- The present difficulty with the decision in Jones is that, because
it took s.5(3) in conscious isolation from s.5(4), the possible impact of
the latter on the former was not considered. The third possibility, however,
is that the impact of s.6 on subsections 5(2) and (4) is such that the reading
of s.5(3) has to be brought into line with it. This too has not been urged
upon us by Mr Allen. He is content for the present to leave Jones where
it is. It is Mr Lissack who argues that, taking the decision in Jones as
given, as we must, there is no daylight between the subsection in issue there
and the one in issue here: their key wording is identical. If Mr Allen had
sought to meet this challenge frontally, it would have been necessary to
consider whether the principle of stare decisis prevented us from considering
the argument.
- What Mr Allen does urge upon us is a fourth, and in the alternative a fifth,
course. His principal submission is that we should adopt a differential interpretation
of subsections (3) and (4). The alternative submission, spelt out in Ms Rayner's
skeleton argument, is that we should qualify the decision in Jones by
excluding from the process of justification under subsection 5(4) anything
already rejected by the tribunal as unreasonable under s.6(1). For reasons
to which I will come, these seem to me to be two sides of one coin.
- It is undoubtedly open to us in the light of the specificity of the argument
and reasoning in Jones to read s.5(4) in a different sense from s.5(3).
Mr Lissack does not contend otherwise. His argument is that we would be unjustified
in doing so.
- Mr Lissack's junior Andrew Short has helpfully set out in his skeleton
argument the series of issues which arise respectively under subsection (1)
and subsection (2). Their parallelism, he submits, argues strongly against
a differential construction:
Under s. 5(2):
- Was there a duty to adjust? If yes
- Did the employer fail to comply with that duty? If yes
- Was the failure to comply justified?
Under s.5(1):
- Was there less favourable treatment for a reason relating to the disabled
person's disability? If yes
- Was the less favourable treatment justified? If yes
- In cases where there has also been an unjustified failure to comply with
the duty to adjust, would the less favourable treatment still have been
justified had the employer complied with the duty to adjust?
- But are the two provisions parallel or analogous? Mr Short's analysis
of s. 5(2) in my view omits something crucial: a failure to comply with the
duty to adjust can only occur if the employer's response has fallen short
of what it was reasonable for him to do. There is no such qualitiative element
to s.5(1): the bare fact of less favourable treatment is all that is required
to establish discrimination. The question then is whether Parliament can
possibly have meant, by enacting s.6 with s.5(2) and (4), to allow an unreasonable
failure to accommodate an employee's disability to be justified so
long as the employer tenably regarded it as immaterial or insubstantial.
If not, but if Jones is to be respected, the solution has to be a
differential meaning.
- Mr Lissack contends that this is not open us. He advances two main reasons.
One is that the only differential meaning which is available is one which
renders s.5(4), so far as anyone can see, otiose. The other, its mirror image,
is that Parliament's election to keep a justification defence to a breach
of s.6 on the statute book until October 2004 has been made in the knowledge
that informed commentators considered s.5(4) not to be otiose and to require
repeal for that very reason. We are faced, he submits, with a triple choice:
to treat s.5(4) as a dead letter; to import into it an improvised ringfence
to prevent the s6 findings from being circumvented; or to give s.5(4) exactly
the meaning given to s.5(3) in Jones. He accepts that there is in
fact a fourth choice - to give s.5(4) a role but to make the test of materiality
and substance an objective one for the tribunal itself to apply - but argues
that to do that would be to overset Jones by stealth; and Mr Allen
has not invited us to do this.
Conclusion
- In my judgment the only workable construction of s.5(4), in the context
of the DDA and its manifest objects, is that it does not permit justification
of a breach of s.6 to be established by reference to factors properly relevant
to the establishment of a duty under s.6. In other words, the meaning of
the closely similar words in the two adjacent subsections is materially different.
In s.5(4), what is material and substantial for the purposes of justifying
an established failure to take such steps as are reasonable to redress disadvantage
cannot, consistently with the statutory scheme, include elements which have
already been, or could already have been, evaluated in establishing that
failure. That this departs significantly from the meaning and effect of s.5(3)
is fully explained by the fact that justification under s.5(3) starts from
a form of discrimination - less favourable treatment - which is established
without the need of any evaluative judgment.
- Such differential construction is no doubt rare and to be avoided - Mr
Lissack may therefore be right to call it extraordinary - but it is not impermissible
if there is no other way to give effect to Parliament's intention. Bennion Statutory
Interpretation (4th ed.) at 992-5 stresses the presumption
against holding words in an Act to be idle but also cites judicial decisions
which have had to go against the presumption. Some of these contain comments
about Parliamentary drafting far sharper than anything deserved by the drafter
of the DDA which is, as both counsel have stressed, pioneering social legislation
always known to be in need of monitoring and review. If absolutely necessary,
words may have to be held to be idle.
- Here, however, the choice is by no means so stark. Even though, as the
task force pointed out and as government accepted, all the examples given
in the Code of the operation of s.5(4) are more relevant to s.6 than to s.5(4),
there is no reason to think that no circumstances can ever arise in which
factors not apt for consideration under s.6 prove material and substantial
under s.5(4); and if they do, the justification defence is there to accommodate
them. In that event, s.5(4) will operate as this court in Jones has
held that s.5(3) operates: anything else would be disruptive of precedent.
- The reason why it seems to me that s.5(4) needs to be construed as I have
proposed above and not as simply excluding those factors which have in the
event been canvassed under s.6 is this. To leave to the respondent in the
employment tribunal the choice of where to deploy its arguments will place
respondents' advisers in an invidious professional and ethical position,
and respondents themselves in a forensic situation in which guile pays. Rather
than risk forfeiting a ground for not accommodating an employee's disability
by having it objectively rejected under s. 6, an employer would gain a tactical
advantage by admitting - indeed asserting - a marginal ground of failure
to take reasonable steps and then advancing his full case, which might have
failed under s.6, by way of justification under s.5(4).
- It follows that the extant statutory provision about discrimination by
failure to make adjustments has something close to the shape which it will
explicitly acquire when the amendments come into force in October 2004. As
it happens, that is also the shape adumbrated in the original White Paper
(Cm 2729, January 1995), which proposed a justification defence for less
favourable treatment but not for failure to make reasonable adjustments.
What is now s.5(4) was not in the initial Bill but, we are told, entered
it just prior to the report stage of its passage in the House of Lords. For
the present, the justification which it affords of a failure to make reasonable
adjustments is not ruled out but is, on a proper reading of the DDA, heavily
restricted.
Postscript
- This makes it unnecessary to address the more modest solution offered by
Mr Allen to the present case. He suggests that the employment tribunal's
findings of fact are such that the National Theatre cannot on any view of
the meaning of s.5(4) establish justification. The full passage of their
extended reasons, from which I earlier quoted briefly, is as follows:
27. The tasks assessment of the Applicant’s abilities seems
to us to have been a fair and reasonable manner to proceed at the time it
took place. The Tribunal accepts that it was fairly and objectively carried
out. It was clear at the time there was concern for aggravation of the injury,
and that the Applicant took longer and needed significant breaks when carrying
out the allocated tasks. We note that at the time there was not an identified
concern of any danger potential to others. But for whatever reason the focus
from there on was on what the Applicant was unable to do, and not on how
the situation could be created whereby he could continue to work. It is our
view that the Respondent could have done significantly more in the direction
of seeing what adjustments could be made to accommodate the Applicant. The
assessment had been carried out at a relatively early stage after injury
had occurred; he was out of practice and short on relevant fitness, bearing
in mind his age, and it is clear on the evidence that the finger’s sensitivity
was still raw. There was an understandable, but overly, caution about allowing
him back to see what he could do. We are not persuaded in the particular
that there was a genuine examination of what modifications to equipment could
have been available to help. Despite the assessment, in our view there was
the opportunity to allow him to grow back into the job (allowing some tolerance
for time, regeneration of strength, practice and fitness), and that this,
as frequently requested by him, would have better identified what he could
do, rather than having the emphasis on what he could not do. We accept that
with the Applicant’s particular skills the range of alternative jobs was
effectively nil. We are left though with the conclusion, on the evidence,
that the Respondent could and should have more actively pursued these alternatives,
to see what could be done.
- On these findings, he submits, the National Theatre has failed to surmount
even the modest hurdle set by Jones, because its belief that there
was now no feasible role for Mr Collins was not based on any "genuine examination
of what modifications to equipment could have been available to help him".
In other words, it was not a reasonably held belief. That such a belief fails
to get over the threshold for justification emerges, Mr Allen submits, from
the two principal judgments in Jones. It must equally be part of the
inquiry proposed by Pill LJ at paragraph 25 (can the employer's reason be
properly described as material and substantial?) and that proposed by Arden
LJ at paragraph 39 (does the employer's reason on critical examination have
substance?). A reason based on no genuine examination of whether the disabled
employee could be accommodated by modifying the equipment in the workshop,
it is submitted, passes neither of these tests.
- The National Theatre's cup of woe is already full, and I see no need to
make it brim over with the consequences of the employment tribunal's findings
of fact. Mr Collins is entitled to succeed because everything going to justification
was subsumed in the finding that a s.6 duty existed and was breached, leaving
no room for a defence under s.5(4). That is enough.
- We have heard no argument on unfair dismissal, and I say nothing about
it.
Order
- I would allow the appeal by restoring the employment tribunal's decision
that Mr Collins' claim under the Disability Discrimination Act 1995 is well-founded
and by remitting the claim for a decision on remedy.
Lord Justice Latham:
- I agree.
Lord Justice Brooke:
43. I also
agree.